Posts tagged ‘meaning’

synthesis: the combining of the constituent elements of separate material or abstract entities into a single or unified entity;

analysis: the separating of any material or abstract entity into its constituent elements.

In order to carry out a synthesis, you must start with the component parts. Otherwise there is no way to proceed.

In order to perform analysis, you must start with some sort of methods for separating into parts.

In recent posts, I have been discussing the idea of carving up the world. That more or less fits the definition of analysis.

My starting assumption, based on what I know about biology, is that an organism starts its life without much knowledge of what exists in the world, but with some innate abilities (methods). So it would seem that analysis, rather than synthesis, should be the basis of learning how to cope in the world.

An example

As a child, maybe at around 12 years of age, I remember taking my bicycle completely apart. And then I reassembled it. That would be an example of analysis, followed by a synthesis.

Many people argue that meaning is objective. Putnam, in effect, was arguing that in his “The meaning of meaning.” But it has seemed to me that Putnam’s argument was really about reference rather than about meaning.

In this post I shall discuss both meaning an reference. And I shall attempt to relate them to my posts about carving up the world.

Intension and extension

It is common to discuss meaning related topics in terms of extension and intension. The extension of a word is the set of things that it can refer. So the extension of “cat” would be the set of all cats. The term “intension” is supposed to be something internal, related to the word. The intension of “cat” might consist of all properties that characterize cats.

This continues my series of posts on truth. Up to now, my discussion has mainly been technical. But truth matters to us because we want to be able to say true things. We use natural language statements about the world (where “world” is understood broadly) in order to say those true things.

Linguistics is not my area, but I cannot avoid it completely. Chomsky’s linguistics is based on the idea that language is a syntactic structure. Presumably the semantics are an add-on to that underlying syntactic structure, although Chomsky doesn’t say much about how semantics makes it into language.

I very much disagree with Chomsky’s view of language. As I see it, language is primarily semantic. I see the rules of syntax as mostly an ad hoc protocol used for disambiguation. So today’s post will be mainly about semantics or meanings. This has to do with how words can refer to things in the world, or how words can be about something. This is related to the philosophical problem of intentionality (or aboutness) of language statements. Here I will be presenting only a broad overview. I expect to get into more details in future posts.

Carving up the world

Similarly, if I were to say “the cat is on the mat”, you would see that as true provided that I had followed the standards of the linguistic community in the way that I used the words “cat”, “on” and “mat”.

According to my theory of truth, we need standards for the use of words such as “cat”, “on” and “mat”, and we judge the truth of a statement based on whether it conforms to those standards.

This is the second of my posts related to an online discussion of Putnam’s book “Reason, Truth and History”. Hence the “RTH2” in the title of this post. For the first such post, check here.

Starting at page 32 of his book, Putnam presents an argument that has come to be known as the “Cats and Cherries” argument, or sometimes as the model theoretic argument. The model theory background from mathematical logic is the Löwenheim–Skolem theorem. The theorem itself says that, under suitable assumptions, a theory might have infinitely many interpretations. If we take natural language to be a theory (as the term “theory” is used in mathematical logic), then this raises the possibility that there might be different ways that natural language words could refer to real world entities.

Putnam considers the possibility of a radical reinterpretation of the English language, such that whenever we say “the cat is on the mat” we really mean “the cherry is on the tree.”